
To begin this post I want dads with daughters to imagine that you’re meeting your daughter’s boyfriend for the first time at Thanksgiving. If this guy walked in and shook your hand, what would your reaction be?

You might not want to punch this guy in the face immediately, but when he starts talking about his time at Yale, or how green energy is going to power his fancy film studio in Missoula, or the great tax breaks he got from the state of Montana to entice him to move from Wyoming to realize his narrative-control dreams, well, I suspect you might start fantasizing about different ways to remove that soft little smirk from his smooth little face.
Don’t worry, it’s not JUST Sean Higgins coming to Missoula. No, he’s bringing along a race-appropriate partner to alleviate the liberal pussy mafia of any misgivings they might have about empowering a white male to tell stories about AND he’s taking about green energy! Let’s see what Forbes has to say about our new narrative controllers.

Missoula is what locals would call a “blue bubble” in a red state. Situated in a valley surrounded by the Rocky and Bitterroot Mountains, this once lumber town turned college town is on the precipice of a new identity: The Hollywood of the Mountain West, cutting away the corrupt bloat of the industry and refocusing on artists, stories, and the workers who make those stories possible. At the center of this transformation are Co-founders President/CCO James Brown III (a Brown University alum and Wharton MBA candidate) and CEO Sean Patrick Higgins (a Yale School of Drama graduate). The film industry has long been dominated by the coastal elites of Hollywood, New York, and in recent years Atlanta thanks to Tyler Perry Studios.
Brown and Higgins are disrupting the status quo with their company, Story House Montana . This 47-acre, 400,000-square-foot film studio is accompanied by Story House Village (Sheridan, WY) a 240-acre live-work community with acquired land, annexed, and final plat filed, with $10M+ in and vertical construction beginning Fall 2025. What these founders are embarking on is revolutionary and uncharted territory for the region. This is much more than a studio, it’s a vertically integrated media and real estate company designed to build a sustainable creative ecosystem and generate lasting community wealth. Over 435 jobs are projected in Missoula, with additional workforce growth tied to Sheridan’s development.
If you thought BOZ ANGELAS was bad, this sounds exponentially worse. And they will ask for MORE tax breaks in order to accomplish this nightmare vision of Hollywood literally metastasizing inland.
It’s no secret that tax breaks for filmmakers at the state-level are now having their intended effect. This quote comes from a Wyoming “news” source plainly stating tax breaks made Missoula a target for the narrative war:
In search of tax incentives unavailable in Wyoming, Higgins moved his film production operations to Montana.
“There’s no incentives in Wyoming right now,” Higgins said during a recent phone interview from California, where he was meeting with investors for three film projects planned for production this fall. “There’s a better runway in other places.”
The site, formerly owned by what Story House described as “a company in a nonrenewable, pollutive industry,” has been reimagined as a clean-energy media manufacturing hub.
“Missoula has given us the opportunity to show what the next era of entertainment infrastructure can look like — green, local and values-driven,” Higgins said.
Values-driven? The only values I see represented by the narrative-controllers at this point is a strategy of coming out of the shadows in order to deploy an overt, in-your-face demoralization campaign as their donors, the psychopath class, uses every trick in the book to keep us distracted and fighting each other instead of them.

Storytellers who step out of line and ignore their STAY QUIET sign really do become hobos, as I can attest, and you can read all about it in one of the best three-part takedowns I’ve ever read about what Hollywood is doing in their war against the rest of us. This series, titled “The Hobo And The Hollywood Goddess” (part I, part II, part III), is so good I’m struggling to write a response that doesn’t reflect how far from conventional reality I’ve traveled to understand the very real murder of Sean Stevenson and Johnny Lee Perry by the Missoula County Sheriff’s Office.
Sean Higgins may think he’s got the last name to pull this off, since it resonates so nicely with the “Summer Higgins” hippie character Taylor Sheridan’s horsey porn used in Yellowstone to mock us with, and it’s ALSO the name of a CIA agent in 3 Days of the Condor, a movie that got to use the inside of the twin towers just two years after those iconic buildings opened.
But 1975 is a LONG time ago. Now, in 2025, we have “former” CIA assets snapping and helping further divide an already divided and pretty much conquered nation of screen-slobbering dopamine screen junkies who think it’s “climate-smart” to take $250,000 grand after giving $70,000 to the library for a “living roof”.
Here’s an excerpt from the first link:
The City of Missoula has secured a $250,000 grant to plan what they describe as “clean energy projects” through a public-private partnership that includes Clearwater Credit Union, Missoula County, Climate Smart Missoula and Missoula Economic Partnership.
The grant, from the Coalition for Green Capital’s Municipal Investment Fund, will be used to identify potential clean energy projects and create a plan to attract funding for their implementation. Missoula was one of 50 communities nationwide selected for the award.
The initiative aims to build what officials called a “pipeline of finance-ready clean energy projects” that would later require additional investment to implement.
Isn’t it funny that our Harvard-trained Mayor uses the word PIPELINE here to discuss the plethora of bullshit that could get fed to our insane leadership if the idea of “green banks” ever takes off? Well, according to the Roosevelt Institute, this is how they see the funnel getting its first real-world test after a decade of smoke-blowing that started in Connecticut, where Yale spawned Sean Higgins and where United Way of Missoula County got that ED long past her shelf-life.
It’s the end of a decade-long effort to mainstream the concept of green banks—public development banks designed to finance the net-zero economy. The idea has come a long way fast. Connecticut created the first American green bank in 2011, then New York in 2013, followed by many other states and municipalities largely with the help of GGRF awardee Coalition for Green Capital. Despite years of advocacy and legislative efforts in 2019 and 2021, the potential for a national entity to finance climate initiatives was still somewhat of an Overton-window-pushing idea even in 2020, when I and other scholars from the Roosevelt Institute and elsewhere discussed its role in an ambitious green public investment agenda in the pages of The American Prospect. (Putting theory into practice, my coauthor Douglass Sims is currently leading one of the fund’s awardees, Justice Climate Fund.)
Later this week, as I prepare to start the first revision of my manuscript, I’m going to highlight another narrative controller who I reached out to via phone a few weeks ago, but never heard back from. I’m very interested in the dead homeless man she’s so haunted by that she just had to use a homeless character in the crime fiction she shits out to her publisher for a paycheck now, so stay tuned.
And, as always, thanks for reading!